Radio: Free, Absolutely Free

If you don't object to 100 million people eavesdropping on your private
life, life can be beautifulafter a fashion. In its role of vulgar
Lady Bountiful, radio is showering quiz-answering Americans from its
loudspeaking horn of plenty. It supervises their marriages and
honeymoons, builds houses for them, gets them jobseven fixes their
teeth or buys them wooden legs.

Every Day Is Christmas. Through the openhandedness of sponsors,
Americans are now driving new cars, thumbing well-filled bank books,
taking jaunts to

Europe, vacationing on private islands in Minnesota lakes and sailing
the inland waterways aboard their own yachts. All they have to do is...